Now a new report from the Financial Times says that Facebook will start getting access to police body camera footage from firearms training exercises as part of a new partnership with the UK’s Metropolitan Police force. The data will be provided to Facebook free of charge and in exchange, Facebook will give free body cameras to the police.

According to the report, the body camera footage won’t just be shared with Facebook. It will also be provided to the UK Home Office and potentially even shared with other companies.

Facebook says it will use the video footage to train its systems and “rapidly identify real-life first person shooter incidents” which it will then remove from its platform.

This partnership is reportedly an extension of Facebook’s work with the National Counter-Terrorism Internet Referral Unit which is run by the Metropolitan Police. The unit works with tech companies to remove online terrorist material and investigate national counter-terrorism threats.

While this data sharing agreement currently appears to be restricted to firearms training exercises, it’s reflective of a larger pattern of big tech companies sharing increased amounts of data with governments and law enforcement agencies.